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10-letter words containing p, i, a, g, e, t

  • plastering — a composition, as of lime or gypsum, sand, water, and sometimes hair or other fiber, applied in a pasty form to walls, ceilings, etc., and allowed to harden and dry.
  • plateauing — a land area having a relatively level surface considerably raised above adjoining land on at least one side, and often cut by deep canyons.
  • pogey bait — candy or a treat used to lure a child into a sexual situation.
  • pragmatize — to act or view matters pragmatically
  • pregenital — of, relating to, or noting reproduction.
  • profligate — utterly and shamelessly immoral or dissipated; thoroughly dissolute.
  • protogenia — the first woman born after the great flood of Zeus, daughter of Deucalion and Pyrrha.
  • purgatives — purging or cleansing, especially by causing evacuation of the bowels.
  • purgatoire — a river in SE Colorado, flowing NE to the Arkansas River. 186 miles (299 km) long.
  • repaginate — to indicate the sequence of pages in (a book, manuscript, etc.) by placing numbers or other characters on each leaf; to number the pages of.
  • replanting — to plant again.
  • septuagint — the oldest Greek version of the Old Testament, traditionally said to have been translated by 70 or 72 Jewish scholars at the request of Ptolemy II: most scholars believe that only the Pentateuch was completed in the early part of the 3rd century b.c. and that the remaining books were translated in the next two centuries.
  • spattering — to scatter or dash in small particles or drops: The dog spattered mud on everyone when he shook himself.
  • spectating — to participate as a spectator, as at a horse race.
  • split page — (in a newspaper) a page replacing one of an earlier edition and containing chiefly the same material in altered form.
  • supergiant — Astronomy. supergiant star.
  • title page — the page at the beginning of a volume that indicates the title, author's or editor's name, and the publication information, usually the publisher and the place and date of publication.
  • trapessing — to walk over; tramp: to traipse the fields.
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